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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2009 |
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If your child’s name begins with the letter C, A, L, I, F, O, R, or N, this park has a perfect photo location for you. Chloe, Aiden, Lily, Isabella, Flynn, Olivia, Ryan, and Noah can pose in front of the glittering gold mirror surface of a giant letter corresponding to his or her name. Sophia, Jackson, Emma, and Mason are out of luck here. Sorry. |
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Disney publicity photo © 2009 Disney |
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In truth, the giant letters aren’t meant to correspond to popular names of children. (Otherwise the letters “J” and “K” would surely be here.) The letters are the first layer of the California postcard entrance to the park. The second layer is the world’s largest ceramic mural, which forms the mountainous backdrop. Next is the Golden Gate Bridge, connecting the two sets of mountains. If you’re standing in the right place, the final layer is the golden sun of Sunshine Plaza, shining behind the bridge. |
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Photo by Tony “WisebearAZ” Moore, 2001 |
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Photo by Werner Weiss, 2007 |
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Photo by Tony “WisebearAZ” Moore, 2001 |
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For most guests, however, this isn’t a gigantic postcard. It’s just the front of a park that looks very different than the nearby older park. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2009 |
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The letters aren’t as fancy from the back, but you’re not supposed to read them backwards. Instead, take a look at the pavement. |
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Photo by Tony “WisebearAZ” Moore, 2008 |
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Photo by Tony “WisebearAZ” Moore, 2008 |
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The letters have the magical ability to accept promotional and seasonal overlays. They were gold with a crackle pattern when the park opened, but could be any color and pattern when you visit. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2008 |
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When it’s Christmas at Yester California Adventure, be sure to admire the candy cane stripes. |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2007 |
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Photo by Chris Bales, 2005 |
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For a colorful way to begin your California Adventure visit, admire the rainbow hues of the World of Color overlay. |
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Photo by Chris Bales, 2010 |
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Photo by Allen Huffman, 2009 |
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Late at night, when the crowds are gone and you’re standing in the right place, it does look like a postcard after all. |
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The giant CALIFORNIA letters were an original design feature of Disney California Adventure when the park opened in February 2001. They served the park for almost—but not quite—ten years. The letters were removed in January 2011 to make way for a new entrance to Disney California Adventure. What would happen to the letters? Although they were not appropriate for the 1920s-era Buena Vista Street entrance Disney California Adventure, they were impressive pieces. |
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Artist’s rendering from press release, May 30, 2012 |
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On May 30, 2012, the Disneyland Resort announced the letters’ fate: Anaheim, Calif., May 30, 2012 – The Disneyland Resort donated the iconic “CALIFORNIA” letters previously located in the esplanade at the Disney California Adventure park entrance to the Friends of the California State Fair, a nonprofit organization that benefits California Exposition & State Fair (Cal Expo) in Sacramento, Calif. Cal Expo is the site of the California State Fair and hundreds of other events annually. “As we near the completion of the Disney California Adventure expansion, it was important to us to find an appropriate home for the ‘CALIFORNIA’ letters,” said Disneyland Resort President George A. Kalogridis. “The letters were very popular with millions of Guests over the past decade, and Cal Expo is a fitting destination to continue their legacy.” Plans are underway to make the letters an integral part of a new Cal Expo entrance. The “CALIFORNIA” letters will make their way to their new home sometime in late September and will be placed high enough at the entrance to be seen from Exposition Boulevard. “The Friends of the California State Fair serving Cal Expo is honored to have been selected the recipient of this gift from Disney Resorts. We see this donation, and the relocation of these letters, [as] a continued and fitting tribute to the celebration of this magnificent state,” said Norb J. Bartosik, Cal Expo CEO/General Manager. Cal Expo is now the fairground for the 17-day California State Fair each July, the 5-day Sacramento County Fair each May, and other annual events. But the State of California once had a grand vision for the 1,063-acre former sheep pasture. As described by the Los Angeles Times on March 10, 1968, Cal Expo was supposed to be “the Disneyland of the North,” with an unprecedented scope for a state fair: A $34 million year-round exposition is rising on the banks of the American River four miles from the [Sacramento] Capitol. No other state has ever embarked on a project quite like it. Planned to have the size and magnitude of a world’s fair, Cal Expo will deal solely with the exciting, widely diversified kaleidoscope of but one state. Plans called for a wide range of attractions, including a 26-acre themed amusement park (“planned as a sugar-coated lesson in geography”), a 5-acre Teen Island (“where boys and girls will be able to thump their guitars as loud as they wish”), Fiesta Island (“where a gourmet restaurant will be surrounded by tasting booths spotlighting California wines, cheeses and fruits”), a 34-acre lake, and “several miles of inland waterways.” Expo Center would offer “a simulated flight by helicopter… from Crescent City to Calexico.” Reading the descriptions now, Cal Expo comes across as a 1968 version of Disney California Adventure—complete with an early take on Soarin’ Over California. |
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Photo by Scott Boccia, 2013 |
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The California Legislature had approved Cal Expo in 1963 based on a feasibility study by Disney Legend Harrison “Buzz” Price’s Economic Research Associates. Price is best known for guiding Walt Disney in the site selection for Disneyland and Walt Disney World, and analyzing whether they would be economically viable. But Price had a long list of other clients. Cal Expo even boasted two executives with Disneyland credentials. Eugene R. “Doc” Lemmon, Cal Expo’s first general manager, had been Director of Operations at Disneyland from 1956 until 1961, when he left to become the general manager of Cedar Point in Ohio. Louis H. Roth, Cal Expo’s first director of design and construction, worked for Disney Legend Joe Fowler as project engineer for construction at Disneyland and was in charge of the Disney exhibits at the 1964-65 New York World’s Fair. You can see his name on a window above the Market House on Disneyland’s Main Street: “Carpenters & Joiners, Surveying & Engineering, L.H. Roth.” The first phase of Cal Expo opened on July 1, 1968, hosting the 58-day maiden run of the California State Fair at its new location. The more ambitious elements of Cal Expo were supposed to open in 1969. Plans called for a year-round exposition by 1970. That’s not what happened. By the end of September 1968, “Doc” Lemmon had resigned—before the Cal Expo board could fire him. What had been promised as a “pay as you go” project had instead run up a $1.5 million deficit from just the 58-day State Fair run, because the actual revenue and attendance were much lower than projected. Once again, Cal Expo was compared to Disneyland, only now it was a politician calling it “a second-rate Disneyland.” Cal Expo never became a year-round attraction. |
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Photo by Tony “WisebearAZ” Moore, August 4, 2000 |
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Photo by Tony “WisebearAZ” Moore, November 10, 2000 |
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The two construction photos bring us back to the other major California-themed attraction—the one that opened in Anaheim in 2001. It also started on the wrong foot. It was also characterized as a “a second-rate Disneyland.” Fortunately, that one turned into something rather wonderful. |
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Photo by Chris Bales, 2022 |
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Here are the links to the other layers of the California postcard entrance: |
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Click here to post comments at MiceChat about this article. © 2024 Werner Weiss — Disclaimers, Copyright, and Trademarks Updated July 26, 2024 |